The membrane-associated ubiquitin ligase MARCHF8 promotes cancer immune evasion by degrading MHC class I proteins

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Abstract

The loss of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules has been proposed as a mechanism by which cancer cells evade tumor-specific T cells in immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI)-refractory patients. Nevertheless, the mechanism by which cancer cells downregulate MHC-I is poorly understood. We report here that membrane-associated RING-CH-type finger 8 (MARCHF8), upregulated by human papillomavirus (HPV), ubiquitinates and degrades MHC-I proteins in HPV-positive head and neck cancer (HPV+ HNC). MARCHF8 knockdown restores MHC-I levels on HPV+ HNC cells. We further reveal that Marchf8 knockout significantly suppresses tumor growth and increases the infiltration of natural killer (NK) and T cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME). Furthermore, Marchf8 knockout markedly increases crosstalk between the cytotoxic NK cells and CD8 + T cells with macrophages and enhances the tumor cell-killing activity of CD8 + T cells. CD8 + T cell depletion in mice abrogates Marchf8 knockout-driven tumor suppression and T cell infiltration. Interestingly, Marchf8 knockout, in combination with anti-PD-1 treatment, synergistically suppresses tumor growth in mice bearing ICI-refractory tumors. Taken together, our finding suggests that MARCHF8 could be a promising target for novel immunotherapy for HPV+ HNC patients.

One Sentence Summary

Targeting MARCHF8 restores MHC-I proteins, induces antitumor CD8 + T cell activity, and suppresses the growth of ICI-refractory tumors.

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